<h2><SPAN name="ICE_CREAM_AND_SHERBETS" id="ICE_CREAM_AND_SHERBETS"></SPAN>ICE CREAM AND SHERBETS</h2>
<p><b>BALTIMORE ICE CREAM</b>—Two quarts of strawberries, two cups of
granulated sugar, half cup powdered sugar, one pint cream, about two
spoonfuls vanilla, half cup chopped nuts, heat the berries and sugar
together, when cool mix other ingredients and freeze.</p>
<p><b>BLACK CURRANT ICE CREAM</b>—Stew one cupful black currants five minutes,
then press through a fine sieve. Add a cupful rich sirup and a cupful
thick cream, beat well, then freeze. When stiff pack in an ornamental
mold, close over and pack in ice and salt. When ready to serve turn out
on a low glass dish, garnish with crystallized cherries and leaves of
angelica.</p>
<p><b>FROZEN ICE</b>—Cook one cup of rice in boiling salted water twelve
minutes. Drain and put it in the double boiler, one quart milk, one cup
sugar and one saltspoon salt. Cook till soft, then rub through a sieve.
Scald one pint of cream and mix with it the beaten yolks of four eggs.
Cook about two minutes, or until the eggs are scalding hot, then stir
this into the rice. Add more sugar, if needed, and one tablespoonful
vanilla. Chill and pack firmly in the freezer or round the mold. Turn
out and ornament the top with fresh pineapple cut in crescent pieces or
with quartered peaches and serve a fresh fruit sirup sauce with the
cream.</p>
<p><b>FRUIT ICE</b>—Three lemons, three oranges, three bananas, three cups
sugar, three pints cold water, by pressing juice from orange and lemons,
strain well, peel banana, rub through strainer into the fruit juice, add
the sugar, then the water, stir until the sugar is dissolved, pour into
freezer. The ice that is used should be pounded until fine, and the
right kind of salt should be used.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106"></SPAN></span></p>
<p><b>ICE CREAM WITH MAPLE SAUCE</b>—Scald one quart of cream, add one-half cup
of sugar, a bit of salt, and when cold freeze as usual, first flavoring
with vanilla or extract of ginger. Reduce some pure maple sirup by
boiling until quite thick, stir into it some sliced pecans or walnuts
and serve hot with each portion of the cream.</p>
<p><b>PINEAPPLE CREAM</b>—Two cups of water, one cup of sugar, boil fifteen
minutes, let cool, add one can grated pineapple. Freeze to mush, fold in
one-half pint of whipped cream, let stand an hour, but longer time is
better.</p>
<p><b>VANILLA ICE CREAM</b>—Put two cups of milk in a double boiler, add a
pinch of soda and scald, beat four eggs light with two cups of sugar,
pour the hot milk on slowly, stirring all the time; turn back into
double boiler and cook until a smooth custard is formed. Cool and flavor
strongly with vanilla because freezing destroys some of the strength of
flavoring. Stir in a pint of sweet cream and freeze.</p>
<p><b>CRANBERRY SHERBET</b>—This is often used at a Thanksgiving course dinner
to serve after the roast. To make it boil a quart of cranberries with
two cupfuls of water until soft, add two cupfuls sugar, stir until
dissolved, let cool, add the juice of one or two lemons and freeze. This
may be sweeter if desired. Serve in sherbet glasses.</p>
<p><b>CURRANT SHERBET</b>—Mash ripe red currants well and strain the juice. To
two cups of the juice add two cups of sugar, two cups of water, and
bring to boiling point. Cook a few minutes and skim well, then pour
while hot slowly on to the whites of two eggs beaten stiff. Beat a few
minutes, cool, and freeze.</p>
<p><b>LEMON GINGER SHERBET</b>—This is made the same as the lemon with the
addition of four ounces of candied ginger cut in fine bits and added to
the sirup with the grated yellow rind of a lemon. Boil until clear, add
lemon juice and a little more of the rind and proceed as with the ice.</p>
<p><b>LEMON SHERBET</b>—Put two cups of sugar into four cups of water and cook
five minutes after it begins to boil. Add one-half level tablespoon of
gelatin soaked in a tablespoon of cold water for fifteen minutes. Stir
one cup of lemon juice and freeze.</p>
<p><b>PINEAPPLE SORBET</b>—Peel and cut up a small sugar loaf pineapple and let
it stand in a cool place over night with a pint of sugar added to it. An
earthen jar is best for holding the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107"></SPAN></span> pineapple, whose acid properties
forbid its standing in tin. In the morning strain, pressing out as much
of the juice as possible. Add to this a pint of water and the grated
rind of an orange. Boil ten minutes, add the juice of one lemon and two
oranges, freeze about fifteen minutes until of a smooth, even,
cream-like texture, and serve after the meat course at dinner. If you
desire a granite which is frozen as hard as ice cream, but should be of
a rough-grained consistency, set the mixture away packed in ice and let
it remain there for two or three hours. Scrape the frozen part
occasionally from the sides of the can and stir long enough to mix the
ice with the mass, but not long enough to make it creamy. Serve in a cup
made of the half skin of an orange with the pulp scraped out.</p>
<p><b>TEA SHERBET</b>—Make a quart of fine flavored tea in the usual way, pour
off, sweeten to taste, add the juice of half a lemon and the fine
shredded peel, and freeze.</p>
<p><b>GLACE DES GOURMETS</b>—Make a custard of one pint milk, six egg yolks,
one cup sugar and a few grains of salt. Strain and add one pint cream,
one cup almonds (blanched, cooked in caramel, cooled, and pounded), and
one tablespoon vanilla. Whip one pint heavy cream and add one-half pound
powdered sugar, one tablespoon of rum, one teaspoon of vanilla and
one-fourth pound of macaroons broken in small pieces. Freeze the first
mixture and put in a brick mold, cover with second mixture, then repeat.
Pack in salt and ice, using two parts crushed ice to one part rock salt
and let stand two hours. Remove from mold and garnish with macaroons in
brandy.</p>
<p><b>MAPLE PARFAIT</b>—Beat four eggs slightly in a double boiler, pour in one
cup of hot maple sirup, stirring all the time. Cook until thick, cool,
and add one pint of thick cream beaten stiff. Pour into a mold and pack
in equal parts of ice and salt. Let stand three hours.</p>
<p><b>PINEAPPLE PARFAIT</b>—Cook for five minutes over the fire one cup
granulated sugar and a quarter cup of water. Beat the yolks of six eggs
until lemon colored and thick, then add the sirup little by little,
constantly beating. Cook in a double boiler until the custard coats the
spoon, then strain and beat until cold. Add two cupfuls pineapple pulp
pressed through a sieve and fold in a pint of cream whipped stiff. Pack
and bury in the ice and salt mixture.</p>
<p><b>STRAWBERRY PARFAIT</b>—Hull, wash and drain some sweet strawberries.
Press through a strainer enough to give<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108"></SPAN></span> about two-thirds of a cup of
pulp. Cook together in a graniteware saucepan one cupful granulated
sugar and half a cup of water until it spins a thread. Do not stir while
cooking. Whip two whites of eggs stiff and then pour the hot sirup over
them and continue beating them until the mixture is cold. As it thickens
add the crushed berries, a spoonful at a time. Have ready a pint of
cream whipped to a solid froth, stir lightly into the egg and berry
mixture, then pack into a covered mold and bury in ice and salt, equal
proportions, leaving it for several hours.</p>
<p><b>VIOLET PARFAIT</b>—This is made the same as white parfait, using
one-third cup of grape juice instead of the boiling water, and adding
half a cup of grape juice and the juice of half a lemon to the cream
before beating.</p>
<p><b>VANILLA PARFAIT</b>—Cook a half cup each sugar and water over the fire
until it threads. Do not stir after the sugar has dissolved. Beat the
whites of three eggs until very stiff, pour the sirup slowly over it,
beating constantly. Flavor with vanilla, and when cold fold in a pint of
cream whipped stiff. Pour into a mold and pack.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109"></SPAN></span></p>
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